Want to Dive in India? We have just one reader report
about this country’s diving, but The Times of India reports
that it’s starting and promoting a dive industry. Bangalore,
India’s version of Silicon Valley, just created its first dive
club to get people certified in city pools and plan dive trips
to places like Goa and the Andaman Islands. PADI’s Project
Aware co-sponsored two underwater surveys at Netrani, on
India’s west coast, which showed an abundance of tropical
reef fish and marine life. Giant clams, humphead wrasse,
whale sharks, manta rays and other species were spotted by
divers in the area. The surveys also report clear waters and a
lack of large-scale trawling.
“We Didn’t Fake It.” We’ve written in depth about
Allyson Dalton and Richard Neely, the two divers who spent
19 hours afloat near the Great Barrier Reef after currents
swept them away from their liveaboard (see our interview
with them in the July 2008 issue). While the Australian government
took their side and pressed criminal charges against
boat operator OzSail, Dalton and Neely are suing the TV
show A Current Affair for defamation. After running an interview
with the couple, the show’s producers then gave the perspective
of Kylie Irwin, a dive instructor aboard the boat who
said OzSail staff had searched for them exhaustively but the two divers didn’t want to be found. He said they must have
set the whole thing up because it would have been “physically
impossible” for boat crew not to have seen them if they had
surfaced within 600 feet of the bat, as they said, and inflated
their safety sausages. Dalton and Neely say their reputations
have suffered; A Current Affair replies they were just giving
both sides of the story.
British Divers Save Australian Desert Bird. The
Torbay Sub-Aqua Club was in a boat half a mile off
England’s Berry Head when they saw a turquoise bird resembling
a parakeet flapping furiously in the water, struggling to
stay afloat. As it was very windy, it took three passes by the
boat to collect the bird, and the divers doubted he would live.
“It couldn’t open its eyes at first,” diver Cathy Jackman told
The Times of London. “He was like a floppy, wet rag.” But they
took the bird, a bright blue budgerigar, to a nearby animal
shelter, where it’s recovering nicely. The Australian desert
native is believed to be a pet that escaped from its cage and
became disoriented over the ocean.
Black Divers/Archeologists Win National Award. A
group of black divers from Tennessee received a Take Pride
in America award from Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and
a tour of the White House last month for their volunteer work in documenting historical shipwrecks.
Diving With a Purpose (DWP) has worked
with the National Park Service since 2003,
meeting for two week-long expeditions
every year to research and record the
history of shipwrecks found in Florida’s
Biscayne National Park. After watching a
documentary on the slave ship Guerrero,
which sunk in Biscayne in 1827 with dozens
of enslaved Africans aboard, DWP founder
and retired repairman Kenneth Stewart
persuaded four friends to turn their dive
trips into archaeological adventures. Now
they dive with pencils, rulers and compasses
to create site maps and identify wreckage
(they’re still looking for the Guerrero).
Stewart also leads the Tennessee Aquatic
Project, which gets youngsters interested
in diving, and he established a scholarship
that allows one minority youngster to participate
in the Park Service’s dive archeology
training sessions.
Rock Star Trades Concert for Reef
Cleanup. After a concert was cancelled
in Tampa, Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry
decided to rest by doing a reef cleanup in
the Gulf of Mexico. The Rock and Roll
Hall of Famer and his wife joined 85 other
divers on July 11 to scoop trash near Lido
and Longboat Keys, where they have a second home. Perry helped to retrieve a big
chunk of fiberglass, 20 feet of rope and an
anchor. He told the Sarasota Herald-Tribune that his efforts “makes people realize you
can’t just throw stuff off the side of the
boat.” The cleanup raised money for the
Mote Marine Laboratory’s Center for
Coral Research.
Turning Clergymen Into Dive Guides. Knowing people still get married during
a recession, Pro Dive International owner
Doug Huberman is using that fact to build
business for his Fort Lauderdale dive shop.
He wants to offer underwater weddings
soon and is looking for pastors, priests and
other clergy members willing to take the
plunge. Debbi Ballard, an ordained Jewish
cantor, is training to perform underwater
ceremonies where the groom can smash a
light bulb with his flipper and the couple
can sip wine out of a sippy cup. She would
wear a mask with a microphone to talk to
the bride and groom while guests on a boat
listen and watch through a video hookup.
Local rabbis are befuddled but say an
ocean wedding could be legal under Jewish
law as long as certain traditions are kept.
Huberman plans to charge $1,500 for an
underwater wedding package.